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Is The Woodlanders ultimately a comedy or a tragedy? Define the two terms and use scenes from the narrative to support your answer.
Look up the definition of a pragmatist, and then detail how far Grace fits this definition. Are there other characters who fit this definition? Are there characters who act as a foil—opposite—to pragmatism?
“Fitzpiers’s relationship to Mrs Charmond is not based in reality.” Discuss. Discuss what this quote means and be sure to give examples from the narrative.
“Given the rigid nature of the class system in Little Hintock, Melbury’s ambition regarding Grace is understandable.” How does the narrative support this quote? Give examples and discuss if this holds true even at the end of the narrative.
Is nature a hostile force in The Woodlanders? If so, to what extent? Provide examples of nature as hostile and/or pastoral.
To what extent do parties in the novel subvert ordinary standards of propriety? Use key events and different characters to support your answer.
How is idleness valorized by the central characters in The Woodlanders? Does it remain valorized, and if so, how, by whom, and why?
“Fitzpiers is likely to lose interest in Grace again, now that he was won back her affections.” Discuss this quote in connection to Dr. Fitzpiers’s actions throughout the novel but especially his “change” with the novel’s ending.
How far is love really just the projection of a subjective state onto an object? Discuss in connection with the characters in the novel.
To what extent can standards of propriety in The Woodlanders be viewed as a necessary or positive thing?
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By Thomas Hardy